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Hospitals Across Texas And The U.S. Mull Vaccine Mandates In Wake Of Houston Methodist Lawsuit

A drone shot of the Texas Medical Center, on Aug. 28, 2020.
Lucio Vasquez
/
Houston Public Media
A drone shot of the Texas Medical Center, on Aug. 28, 2020.

When a federal judge threw out a lawsuit against Houston Methodist Hospital over its worker vaccine requirement, he did not mince words.

U.S. District Judge Lynn Hughes of Houston called the suit a 鈥減ress-release style鈥 complaint. He 鈥 one of 117 Methodist employees seeking to overturn the mandate 鈥 for her argumrnt comparing the policy to Nazi experimentation during the Holocaust, calling it 鈥渞eprehensible.鈥 And in no uncertain terms, he cleared the way for employers to set their own vaccination policies, in accordance with guidance from the U.S. Department of Justice: 鈥淩eceiving a COVID-19 vaccination is not an illegal act, and it carries no criminal penalties,鈥 he wrote.

Now more and more hospitals across Texas 鈥 and around the country 鈥 have begun to set their own mandates: In the past week alone, hospitals in Houston, San Antonio and Dallas have followed Methodist鈥檚 lead. And more are likely to come, according to University of Houston law professor Seth J. Chandler.

"There's nothing really special about Methodist Hospital in terms of the law, and there was nothing in the court's opinion that depended on any factors that were peculiar to Methodist,鈥 Chandler said. 鈥淎nd so other hospitals can have, I think, some confidence that the decision reached in the Methodist case is going to apply equally well to them.鈥

The 117 employees sued Methodist in May, arguing that because none of the COVID-19 vaccines had received full approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, they ammounted to 鈥渆xperimental鈥 treatments, and that requiring employees to get their shots was in violation of federal law.

All three vaccines have received emergency use authorization.

Houston Methodist Hospital in Houston鈥檚 Texas Medical Center, on Aug. 28, 2020.
Lucio Vasquez
/
Houston Public Media
Houston Methodist Hospital in Houston鈥檚 Texas Medical Center, on Aug. 28, 2020.

The district court rejected those aruments arguments last month. And while there may be some cases where an employee has a legitimate religious objection or a medical condition that stops them from getting vaccinated, Chandler said employers will likely find themselves within their legal rights in providing a safe workplace by requiring vaccinations.

"It seems to me hospitals have about the strongest case there is to require their employees to be vaccinated, so that going to the hospital doesn't become a way of catching COVID,鈥 he said.

In the wake of the lawsuit, . Just 25 holdouts opted to get vaccinated.

Since the suit鈥檚 dismissal, at least five more Texas hospital systems issued their own mandate. The state鈥檚 largest nonprofit medical provider, Baylor Scott & White Health, and Methodist Health System 鈥 both serving North Texas 鈥 gave workers until Oct. 1 to get their shots. Baptist Health System announced the requirement on Friday for its five San Antonio hospitals.

Houston鈥檚 Memorial Hermann Health System, the largest nonprofit health system in the region, announced its own mandate . Dr. David Callender, the hospital system鈥檚 president and CEO, told host Craig Cohen that the surge of cases due to the more transmissable delta variant made the decision more necessary than ever.

In Houston鈥檚 Texas Medical Center, the seven-day average positivity rate has jumped to 12.1% 鈥 up from 3.1% last month. In July, hospitals were seeing 133 cases per day. That number has jumped to around 2,000. Statewide, the number of reported COVID-19 cases was around 1,100 on July 1. On Tuesday, that number rose to nearly 12,000, according to state health data.

"We think it is very important for health care workers across the country to be vaccinated," Callender said in the interview.

According to reports from across the U.S., hospitals outside the state are beginning to issue their own mandates.

Trinity Health in Michigan, New York-Presbyterian Hospital and the Baptist Health System 鈥 which serves Kentucky and southern Indiana 鈥 announced their vaccine policies in recent days. The New Hampshire Hospital Association on Tuesday endorsed a hospital vaccine mandate in that state.

"Our actions are critical to stopping the spread of COVID-19, and we must all remain vigilant and continue taking steps to mitigate the spread of the virus, and most importantly, that means to get vaccinated," Steve Ahnen. president of the New Hampshire Hospital Association, .

The first hospital to announce its requirement after the suit was Baylor College of Medicine, in the Houston area. last week, Executive Vice President James McDeavitt told members of the business community that others should do the same.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e starting to see a groundswell of organizations 鈥 starting in health care but I think it will spread to others 鈥 that are going to mandate vaccinations,鈥 he said during the presentation. 鈥淎nd if you can mandate or strongly encourage, I would strongly encourage you to do so.鈥

Additional reporting by Joseph Leahy of KUT.

Houston Public Media